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Celebrate Native American Heritage Month! (November)

A reading list celebrating Native American Heritage Month (November).

About Native American Heritage Month

Black square with yellow and green text reading "Native American Heritage Month"November is National American Indian Heritage Month! We use this time to recognize the contributions and influence of Native Americans to the history and culture of the United States.

CCC Library has curated a list of books and streaming videos celebrating Native American heritage.

  • Visit the eBooks page to view a collection of eBooks CCC library has chosen to highlight during Native American Heritage Month.
  • Visit the Print books page to view a collection of physical books that you can find on the shelves in the CCC library. 
  • Visit the streaming videos page to view a collection of videos CCC library has chosen to highlight during Native American Heritage Month. 
  • Are we missing something? Visit the suggest a purchase page to request that we add something to our collection.

CC image: Nativeamericanheritagemonth.gov

Learn more!

CCC Land Acknowledgment

We acknowledge that the Clackamas Community College campuses reside on the traditional homelands of the Clackamas, Cascades, and Tumwater bands of Chinooks, as well as the Tualatin and Pudding River bands of Kalapuya and the Northern Molalla people. They lived and prospered by maintaining strong cultural ties to the land, and through wise management of resources. As signers of the Willamette Valley Treaty of 1855, they were removed from their homelands to the Grand Ronde Indian Reservation where they became members of the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde. Please join us in taking this opportunity to thank and honor the original caretakers of this land, their lives, and their descendants that live on as Tribal members today, still carrying on the traditions and cultures of their ancestors.

CCC Labor Acknowledgement

We acknowledge that the foundation and wealth of the United States was built upon the forced labor of enslaved African people, involuntary and trafficked Indigenous labor, and the often-exploited labor of immigrant domestic and farm workers. Their vital contributions and resilience in spite of violence, terror tactics, and bloodshed are integral to understanding our nation's past, present, and hope of what's to come. The prosperity many enjoy today is rooted in centuries of labor extracted under conditions of injustice, inequality, and ongoing systemic oppression. Acknowledging this truth is a step toward honoring those who were denied justice, and toward creating a future that is more equitable, inclusive, and humane.

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